F or those that like to get started with the new Microsoft products Expression Blend and Expression Design. You should check out these links below. They give you access to tons of FREE video tutorials hosted by lynda.com
Links:
- Getting started with Expression Blend
In Getting Started with Expression Blend , Lee Brimelow covers all the basics [...]
Archive for the ‘.net’ Category
Get started with Expression Blend and Design
Posted in .net, .net 3.0, Expression Blend, Expression Design, Visual Studio .Net "Orcas", Visual Studio .Net 2005, WPF on June 6, 2007 | No Comments »
Code Style Enforcer
Posted in .net, Visual Studio .Net 2005 on June 5, 2007 | No Comments »
Code Style Enforcer is a DXCore plug-in for Visual Studio 2005 that checks the code against a configurable code standard and best practices. It is developed for C#, but some of the rules will also work for VB .NET, though not tested.
You can create your own design rules to which everybody needs to comply. This [...]
Windowsclient.net New Microsoft Community Site
Posted in .net, Visual Studio .Net 2005, WPF on May 13, 2007 | No Comments »
As you can read on the home page:
The WindowsClient.NET Community Site Launches
Welcome to WindowsClient.net, the community learning resource for Windows Forms and Windows Presentation Foundation.
This site focuses on all aspects of rich client development on Windows using the .NET Framework. New content from both the Microsoft product teams and from the community will be added [...]
MSDN Webcast on unit testing
Posted in .net, Unit testing, Visual Studio .Net 2005, msdn on May 11, 2007 | No Comments »
Since I had to look for this at work for a co-worker of mine I decided to share it. Because it’s actually an on-demand webcast which requires you to register and so on…
To save you all that hassle the webcast can be downloaded from this post.
[display_podcast]
Up to Sequence diagrams
Posted in .net, .net 2.0 on May 3, 2007 | No Comments »
Yesterday I blogged about the autodiagrammer add-in for Reflector to visualize .net assemblies in class diagrams. Today I’ve found a nice ad-in that will generate Sequence Diagrams out of the .net assemblies. If they keep this up we can do what we’ve always wanted to do, program first and analyze later. because these tools will [...]
Reverse engineer .net assemblies to Class Diagrams
Posted in .net on May 1, 2007 | No Comments »
I’ve found this tool that acts a bit like the reflector of Lutz Roeders. The main difference is that instead of a treeview of the classes it gives you a full blown class diagram! To do Sacha Barber created AutoDiagrammer.
I’ve you are not ready to give up on Reflector, but still want to use [...]
Visual Studio Orcas Beta available !!!
Posted in .net, .net 2.0, .net 3.0, .net 3.5, Asp.net, Asp.net 2.0, Asp.net Ajax, General, Visual Studio .Net "Orcas" on April 20, 2007 | No Comments »
I saw the notice on Informationweek that Microsoft released a beta of the VS.net Orcas.
Find out more here.
Developer Highway Code
Posted in .net, .net 2.0 on April 19, 2007 | No Comments »
While browsing my saved feeds I found the following free ebook that you can download from msdn. I think I will read this one since we are currently doing something similar.
Developer Highway Code
To build software that meets your security objectives, you must integrate security activities into your software development lifecycle. This handbook captures and [...]
Enable PDF search in Windows Sharepoint Service 3.0
Posted in .net, Sharepoint on April 11, 2007 | No Comments »
In my struggle to setup my ebook library I’ve encountered the problem that none of my pdf files were indexed by the sharepoint search service. Something I could have guessed because pdf is not a microsoft owned document format. So I searched a bit on how to solve this and came up with the following:
The [...]
Why CAB? A business manager’s perspective on [Microsoft] ’s CAB
Posted in .net, .net 2.0, CAB on April 10, 2007 | No Comments »
As I’ve been working with CAB I really like this initiative. I’ve seen that it’s hard to convince managers higher up the chain of this new way of working because they can’t see anything different. In the end it’s still an application that runs like another, but it’s the way you application runs that is [...]
